Monday, June 25, 2012

Author Interview: Luisa M. Perkins

I'm so stinking excited to host my dear friend Luisa on my blog today. She and I met online years ago, when my blog was brand new. We struck up a friendship based on the fact that we're both knitters (that's how we connected originally), writers, and Mormon.

Our friendship has gone way beyond those things. Today, we communicate via email and text almost every day, often several times, as we report our progress with to-do lists and goals and cheer each other on. Everyone needs a Luisa in their lives.

Aside from being a great friend, she's a great writer. As long-time readers know, I don't officially review books here. That said, her new book, Dispirited, is fantastic. It's deliciously creepy (this from someone who doesn't like to be scared), with a fascinating story, complex characters, and lyrical writing (something missing from a lot of fiction).

First, a bit about Luisa. Then her interview. And finally, a giveaway!

Luisa Perkins writes contemporary fantasy. She loves cooking and eating,
all kinds of music, and knitting. She and her husband, Patrick, have
six children and one aging-but-still-insane cat. They are in the process
of moving from the Hudson Highlands to Pasadena, California.

And now our interview about writing and her new book. (Isn't the cover delicious?)

AL: How long have you been writing and how did you get started?
(When did the bug bite you?)

LP: I’ve been writing off and on since I was four
years old. (Note to self: remember to burn those early journals.) I started
writing because reading was my life, and I wanted to give that gift of wonder
and escape to others—kind of a “pay it forward” situation.

AL: Where did the idea for Dispirited come from, and how is
it significant to the book?

LP: A long time ago, I read an article about
astral projection. I immediately wondered—as cool as it sounded to have your
spirit floating free—how would you possibly protect your body while you were
away? That problem wouldn’t leave my imagination alone until I started
exploring it through fiction.

AL: What research did you have to do for it? What was the most
interesting thing you learned?

LP: I read a lot of folklore from around the world
about unembodied or disembodied spirits. (I realize those terms are somewhat
redundant) One of the most compelling myths was that of the wekufe, a Chilean legend about
malevolent beings who envy the bodies of the living.

AL: What is your writing style? Are you an outliner or a
by-the-seat-of-your-pantser? Somewhere in between?

LP: I actually totally changed styles in the midst of writing Dispirited. I started out
knowing how I wanted it to end, but having no idea how to get there. I wrote
the first third of the book that way—in the “discovery” or “pantsy” way.

Then I got horribly stuck and started
researching story structure and outlining methods in my desperation. I made a
spreadsheet and finished the book adhering to a pretty strict outline. I don’t
think I’ll ever go back to pantsing it.

AL: What is your typical writing schedule like?

LP: I wish I had one. I try to write every weekday—or at least every day that my children are in school. I try to get that done sometime between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m., so that I can be fully present for my kids when they get home from school. It doesn’t always work that way. I am trying hard to be more consistent and disciplined.

AL: What is one big thing you've learned through the process of
publishing this novel?

LP: That I am not my writing—that there will inevitably be people who do not care for my writing, and that I can’t take that personally.

AL: What's been the biggest surprise?

LP: I love to garden. Every spring, I plant seeds. A few weeks later, I am always astonished and delighted when they actually grow. It’s the same kind of act of faith when you publish a book—and the same fun surprise when people actually buy it and enjoy it.

AL: What’s the greatest challenge?

LP: My greatest challenge has been trying to balance focusing on marketing the currently published book with working on my new work in progress. It’s very hard for me to switch hats like that.

AL: What’s the greatest reward?

LP: I love hearing from readers who were touched by the book—that it frightened them or made them cry or made them think. Books affect
me deeply, and so when my book makes an impression others, I get that “pay it
forward” reward that got me writing in the first place.

AL: Which authors are your biggest literary influences in the
national market?

LP: I’ll stick to people who are alive, or we’ll be here all day.

Susanna Clarke and Neil Gaiman write
the kind of quietly creepy book that I find thrilling and thought-provoking.

Peter Straub and Stephen King’s books are never quiet, but I almost always get sucked into their masterful webs of dread and hope and redemption.

George R.R. Martin and Neal Stephenson are geniuses at creating immersive, complex, fascinating worlds and plots.

Mark Helprin is unmatched for the gorgeous and uplifting way he portrays the human struggle.

I could go on and on listing writers whose work I deeply envy.

In the LDS market?

There’s this writer I adore named Annette Lyon. You should check her books out. They rock.

Most writers read a lot, but for someone who wants to break out, I would say that it’s time to add weightlifting to your cardio routine. By that, I mean read outside your favorite genre. Hard stuff. Classic literature, histories, biographies, poetry. I firmly believe that you’ll only ever write half as well as the stuff you consistently read. If my writing could ever be half as good as that of Dickens or Cather or Toni Morrison? So be it.

I also wish every writer or artist or other creative type would read Steven Pressfield’s two amazing books, The War of Art and Turning
Pro. They are second only to the scriptures as to influence on my creative
life. My writing lives and dies by them. Buy and digest them at once.

Isn't Luisa awesome? I love her to pieces. Be sure to check out her cookbook, Comfortably Yum, as well. I'll never be the cook she is, by I can pretend.

This is a great book for reading and discussing in a book club; it's got lots of layers and cool meanings and symbols. Luisa has an awesome discussion guide for book clubs, created by a friend who is a pro at these things. Get the discussion guide for Dispirited HERE. But don't read it unless you've finished the book, as spoilers abound.

The Giveaway!Luisa will send one copy of Dispirited to one lucky reader. Leave a topic-oriented comment on this post. For additional entries, spread the word via Facebook, Twitter, and/or your blog. Leave comments for each thing you do so I can keep track. A winner will be drawn on Sunday, July 1, and the name announced a week from today, on July 2.

Be sure to include an e-mail address I can reach you at. If the winner doesn't reply to my notification e-mail within 24 hours, they lose their prize, and that would be a real bummer.

8 comments:

I think one of the most valuable things I got out of Pressfield's The War of Art was that the discouragement and frustration I often feel is normal and part of being a writer. Just knowing all writers go through that makes it easier to deal with.

Way back in the Cre8buzz days I got to read the first few chapters of a story Luisa was working on. It turned out to be Dispirited. What I had read was wonderful, drew me in and made me want to read the rest of the story. It haunted me for the next several years (which is appropriate don't you think?) until it was published. I was VERY happy to be able to read it and put my wonderings about the story to rest. Dispirited did not disappoint! Luisa wrote a beautiful and suspenseful story. I have it on Kindle, but I'd love a hard copy as well!

I love fantasy, but haven't read much modern-day. Didn't care too much for Terry Brooks' modern day tales. I also love to read clean books so I don't have to worry about profanity. Your books sound intersting and I'm interested in reading "Dispirited" I hope to win a copy. sknr@aol.com

Great interview! That's interesting that she went from "pantsing" to outlining and won't look back. Somehow, she didn't strike me as the type. I've already got "Dispirited" and will be reading it soon...in between all my other suspense novels.

There were so many great words of advice. What hit me the most was this..."I would say that it’s time to add weightlifting to your cardio routine. By that, I mean read outside your favorite genre. Hard stuff. Classic literature, histories, biographies, poetry."

Thanks for the chance to win Luisa's book. The idea of astral projection fascinates me. I have heard from so many that this book is great.